Penn State News - Amara Solarihttp://www.psu.edu/
en-usPenn State University Relationsnews@psu.edu (Penn State News)Art history professor discusses colonial Maya/Catholic iconshttp://news.psu.edu/story/412499/2016/05/26/research/art-history-professor-discusses-colonial-mayacatholic-icons
The research and creative activity of College of Arts and Architecture faculty members is on display in a series of approximately three-minute videos produced by Cody Goddard, multimedia specialist for the college’s eLearning Institute, and Cynthia White, research associate.
http://news.psu.edu/story/412499/2016/05/26/research/art-history-professor-discusses-colonial-mayacatholic-iconsThu, 26 May 2016 10:43 -0400Penn State News - Amara SolariThe End is … Nahhttp://news.psu.edu/story/141983/2012/08/22/research/end-%E2%80%A6-nah
You've heard it all before: The sky is falling! The world is ending! This time, though, the shouting is louder -- the loudest it's been since Y2K. Hundreds of books and thousands of Web sites trumpet the bad news. The noise will surely reach a crescendo this fall, as we inch ever closer to December 21, 2012, the date that corresponds to the end of the current cycle of creation in the so-called Long Count calendar of the ancient Maya. Doomsday proponents say the Maya had it all figured out, and that they left us an ominous warning. But did they? In a new book, Matthew Restall and Amara Solari, both specialists in Maya culture and colonial Mexican history at Penn State, hack their way through to the roots of all the fuss.
http://news.psu.edu/story/141983/2012/08/22/research/end-%E2%80%A6-nahWed, 22 Aug 2012 (All day) -0400Penn State News - Amara Solari